Philips Classics Records

(Redirected from Philips Classics)

Philips Classics Records, commonly referred to as Philips Classics, was a classical music label founded by PolyGram that existed from 1983 until 2009.[1] A new division called Philips Classics Productions was set up to manage the Philips Classics label.

Philips Classics Records
Logo
Parent companyPolyGram (1983-1998)
Universal Music Group (1999-2008)
Founded1983
FounderPhonogram International B.V., subsidiary of PolyGram
Defunct2009
GenreClassical music
Country of originNetherlands
LocationBaarn

It was successful with artists including Alfred Brendel, Sir John Eliot Gardiner, Sir Neville Marriner and the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields, Mitsuko Uchida, Julian Lloyd Webber, Sir Colin Davis and André Rieu.

A significant release by the label was the 180-CD The Complete Mozart Edition, which featured all works by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, known at the set's publication in 1990–1991 for the bicentenary of the composer's death. It was re-released as the Complete Compact Mozart Edition.

In 1997, Philips Classics Productions was reorganized as Philips Music Group.

Parent Universal Music Group, which was formed in 1999 from the merger of the PolyGram and MCA families of labels, merged the label into Decca Records. Decca continued to use the Philips Classics label for re-editions until 2009 under a licensing agreement with the Philips company.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Gerben Bakker (2011). The Making of a Music Multinational: PolyGram's International Businesses, 1945–1998. Cambridge University Press.
edit